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Remembering Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto

Icewolf

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On April 4, 1979, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto walked to the gallows in the depths of the night. Within minutes, he was dead. Pakistan’s first elected leader belonged to the ages. The Pakistan army, instrumental in his rise to power, had clearly decided he had become dispensable.

It was a tragic end to what might have been a happier story.

Back in the later part of the 1960s, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was Pakistan’s man of the future. In the 1970s, when he was Pakistan’s prime minister, an American journal placed him on a pedestal with others who were thought would make a difference in the times ahead. By April 1979, he was dead, executed by the brutal military regime of Ziaul Haq. It has been thirty-six years since Bhutto was hanged and then buried, on April 4, in his village Garhi Khuda Bakhsh outside Larkana. Since that dark, dismal day, he has remained a man who arouses strong passions among Pakistanis and among people elsewhere around the world.

People of my generation were in school when Bhutto swiftly rose to prominence in Pakistan through his perch in the regime of Field Marshal Ayub Khan. He was minister for commerce before he became minister for industries and natural resources. In January 1963, when Mohammad Ali Bogra died of a heart attack, Bhutto took charge as minister for external affairs (the term ‘foreign minister’ came to be used later).

At one point, he also took over as general secretary of the ruling Convention Muslim League, with Ayub occupying the presidency of the party. A fanatical admirer of the military ruler at that point in time, Bhutto publicly suggested that Ayub Khan be made Pakistan’s president for life. In 1965, we were too naïve to understand the opportunism that underscored the Bhutto character.

We loved it when he excoriated the Indians at the United Nations Security Council in September 1965. We thought he was defending Pakistan’s interests. In January 1966, it was a glum-looking Bhutto in the company of Lal Bahadur Shastri, Ayub Khan, and their delegations in Tashkent moments after the signing of the Tashkent Declaration. Everyone looked happy. Bhutto did not. We loved him, for we had by then begun to dislike Ayub Khan.

Bhutto was forced out of the government by Ayub Khan in July 1966. His replacement as foreign minister, Syed Sharifuddin Pirzada, did not impress us. And so when Bhutto formed the Pakistan People’s Party in November 1967, we talked about it in school. There was no question he was our hero, that we looked to the day when he would be Pakistan’s president. The moment came, sometime in 1968, when he did inform Pakistanis that he would challenge Ayub Khan at the presidential election scheduled for 1970. Time magazine carried the report in one of its issues.

By the end of 1968, as political unrest spread across Pakistan and as the name of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman began to be heard increasingly vociferously, my father took it upon himself to educate me on the background of the man who would someday be the founder of an independent Bangladesh. I studiously read newspaper reports on the proceedings of the Agartala conspiracy case.

As Mujib’s persona took an increasingly potent shape in Pakistan, my infatuation for Bhutto went into a state of slow but sure decline. When he went to jail in November 1968, I was not worried. Indeed, I was a trifle amused when, at a judicial hearing challenging his detention, he produced a piece of meat, one of two served to him the previous night at dinner, to demonstrate before the court the degree to which he was being humiliated in prison. And then he went dramatic. ‘The wheel of time will turn,’ he declaimed, ‘and in the revolution of that turn a better tomorrow will dawn.’ I noted the statement down in one of my school notebooks.

During the election campaign of 1970, Bhutto demonstrated the purely unconventional and the shockingly dramatic. In Sanghar, as bullets whizzed past his jeep, he jumped off the vehicle and bared his chest to his assailants, daring them to kill him. It was a brave thing to do, or so I thought. Today, with good reason, I believe it was all stage managed, just as his act of tearing up a UN Security Council resolution in December 1971 was a put-on. We now know it was a simple piece of paper he was shredding as he stormed out of the chamber. Be that as it may, when Bhutto went to Quetta in June 1970, my classmates and I decided to see him and get his autograph. Somehow it was I who did the talking. He gave us his autograph and then treated us to orange juice. He introduced us to his daughter Benazir.

The Machiavellian aspects of the Bhutto character began to manifest themselves soon after the 1970 elections. We thought he would make a good leader of the opposition once Sheikh Mujibur Rahman took over as Pakistan’s first elected prime minister. In the event, Bhutto went on to undermine the results of the election and aid the Pakistan army in suppressing the Bengali nationalist movement in March 1971.

On 20 December 1971, as he addressed Pakistan’s people hours after being sworn in as Pakistan’s president, he spoke eloquently of building a new Pakistan out of the debris of war. I heard him ramble on for long, interminable minutes. The enthusiasm I had once felt, in 1965, when he spoke at the UN was not there any more. He had destroyed the lives of Bengalis, had condoned genocide, had been party to the task of depriving Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of power legitimately derived from an exercise of the ballot.

It was a rain-swept April evening at the Dhaka YMCA in 1979, when my young teacher Syed Khwaja Moinul Hasan and I remembered Bhutto. He had been hanged at dawn and was already in his grave.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto could have been a pivotal figure in history. He had squandered his chances. The very army that had raised him to prominence in the late 1950s had finally pushed him to an ignominious death in the late 1970s.
 
Bangladeshi people will always remember Zab.

Yep - the older ones of course do. And they are on their last legs - if they're still around.

I blame all four (Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan, Bhutto and Mujib) for playing their roles in the disintegration of Pakistan (especially Yahya Khan). 'Idhar Tum, Udhar Hum' slogan of Bhutto also played a role. If Bhutto had agreed to some semblance of self-rule (as suggested by Mujib early in the game) that could've saved the day. But the events played right into the hands of New Delhi - as it were.

According to my father - Bhutto's futile one-day negotiations (just a sham, really) with Mujib had concluded and he left in a BOAC Vickers vanguard from Tejgaon Int'l Airport (like the one below). As the dark smoky trails of the airplane engines flying west toward Karachi faded from view my dad asked his brother if all hope was lost. Yes - came the reply.

Bea_vickers_vanguard_g-apec_arp.jpg


Soon after (in days) - Mujib was airlifted to Pakistan and the bloody military crackdown commenced - courtesy of Yahya Khan.

I found one source (from Majid Nizami, Editor-in-Chief, The Nation, December 2011) which offers a lot of insight and his personal exchanges with Mujib prior to 1971. After the fact - Pakistani ministers and high officials like people from the Nawab family of Dhaka (Khawaja Nazimuddin, Khawaja Shahabuddin and Nawab Hasan Askari, the last Nawab of Dhaka) and people like Nurul Amin would be branded as traitors by the AL. The truth like always lies somewhere in between.

More here,

Ayub, Yahya, Bhutto, Mujib played part
 
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pakistan broke because of yahya khan. his drunkness. nothing more nothing less

Ha ha LOL :laugh:

There was a few more things involved. He was a mard-ka-mard, man's man and with all the usual vices (including womanizing, unmitigated cruelty and disregard for human life to name a few). But in real terms his failure to contain the situation without letting it get out of hand was the primary issue. He failed at his job as Martial Law Administrator - miserably.

I think there was lots of programs in Pakistan that discussed this, but I thought this was more or less complete (please comment if I'm off base),


Also here's ZAB after the fall of Dhaka -clearly disappointed but keeping his chin up nonetheless,

 
i believe Sheikh Mujib was ambivalent about whether to become PM of United Pakistan or to create Bangladesh (an Indian satellite state). to a fresh observer it could come as a surprise because becoming United Pakistan PM should have been the obvious choice.

on one hand, all of Sheikh Mujib's political life was spent on either working for Pakistan Movement or trying to get ahead in the United Pakistan political scene, which he did by doing ethnic politics to win Bengali votes. but then on the other hand, certain elements in PAL (Awami League) and much far leftist groups had their ideas to become an Indian satellite state.

it was through those far leftists that India operated in East Pakistan, and it was through those far leftists that India manipulated Sheikh Mujib as it wanted. even at the height of his popularity in United Pakistan and possible premiership of United Pakistan, Sheikh Mujib may not have had a choice but to obey those leftist Indian agents. after all they are what kept the PAL growing as a party, even at the cost of depending on India's dirty hand in all this.

Sheikh Mujib could have delivered virtually on everything his political cause concerned, like for example, he could have made Dhaka the United Pakistan capital. but the evil elements kept him from seeing that, as the article Ayub, Yahya, Bhutto, Mujib played part given by @Bilal9 shows Mujib still talked of doubts of his ability to exercise power as the United Pakistan PM.

Bhutto had every incentive to consolidate his power in West Pakistan even after his defeat to Mujib. after all, these are South Asian politicians. but Sheikh Mujib, instead of behaving like the victor, had to give in to the pressure from the nexus involving his more extreme peers and India.

if Mujib was not manipulated by India, he as the election victor would have stood his ground in the negotiations with Bhutto and Yahya. if Bhutto could not accept the election results*, he should have been the one to break away from Pakistan to turn West Pakistan into a 'Sindhidesh', and let East Pakistan be just Pakistan.

*and also if India had been manipulating Bhutto, if India started major operations in West Pakistan, and if India invaded ("liberated") West Pakistan
 
India Invaded Pakistan In 1971: Know The Facts, And The Enemy
Discussion in 'Military History & Tactics' started by @Md Akmal, Jun 17, 2011.


Published by: Bangladesh Defence Journal

In the Secret Affidavit of Yahya Khan many behind-the-scene details have been revealed regarding the 1971 war…


"It was Bhutto, not Mujib, who broke Pakistan . Bhutto’s stance in 1971 and his stubbornness harmed Pakistan ‘s solidarity much more than Sheikh Mujib’s six-point demand. It was his high ambitions and rigid stance that led to rebellion in East Pakistan . He riled up the Bengalis and brought an end to Pakistan ‘s solidarity. East Pakistan broke away."

The above statement was made by former President of Pakistan General Aga Muhammed Yahya Khan (February 4, 1917 – August 10, 1980) in his secret Affidavit placed with the Lahore High Court. Twenty-seven years after his death, in December 2005 the Pakistan government released this document for public information. In this affidavit, Yahya Khan describes many sensational incidents that occurred before the 1971 war and after, during his rule. He writes of his role as President, his shortcomings, of how he was used like a pawn in a chess game. He speaks of traitors behind the scenes, of the roles played by Bhutto and Mujib, of how and why the Pakistan army cracked down on Bengalis, how far the Generals were responsible, who were behind the genocide and so on. Other than the Hamudur Rahman Commission Report of 1972, this is the only publication containing the statements of Yahya Khan, giving his version of the events of 1971.

Once the war ended, Bhutto immediately took over power and placed President Yahya Khan under house arrest. The Bhutto government treated Yahya Khan and his family ruthlessly. When General Ziaul Huq came to power in 1977, he released Yahya Khan. It was then that Yahya decided on this affidavit, to record his statements for posterity. He made this affidavit through Advocate Manzur Ahmed Rana of the Lahore High Court.

The affidavit consists of 57 pages. Before the affidavit was filed with the court, Yahya Khan carefully scrutinised each typed page in May 1978 at his house in Rawalpindi . He made a few amendments here and there and then signed the document, declaring it to be the truth. After a long spell of illness, this military ruler finally breathed his last in August 1980 in the house of his brother Muhammed Ali in Lahore .

In his affidavit, Yahya Khan states how the government had been pushed back against the wall. Awami League President Sheikh Mujibur Rahman gained immense power and Yahya Khan could not accept his attitude. He says that Mujib had brought the administration to a standstill. This was unacceptable, intolerable. This was a rebellion against the government. He says that there was no alternative to military action against this uprising. He says he did not launch Operation Searchlight on March 25, 1971 at the behest of Bhutto or anyone else. He issued these order in his capacity as President and Army Chief in order to quell the uprising.

Yahya Khan, in this document, is unwilling to accept that the cessation of East Pakistan and the surrender of the Pakistan army as a military defeat. He says this is was a naked conspiracy of India . He berates India and Russia for their role in this regard and has all gratitude for the United States and China for their support. He terms Mujib as a patriot, but says that Awami League had a section of radical leftists who were instigating him. They did not want to relinquish the opportunity to materialise India ‘s long cherished dream of breaking up Pakistan.

According to Yahya Khan, it was Tikka Khan who issued the orders to capture Mujib dead or alive. Bhutto had wanted to hang Mujib. Mujib was prepared to change his six-point demand if necessary. The news of America ‘s Seventh Fleet and China ‘s involvement in the war were rumours. Yahya claims that in the end he wanted to leave East Pakistan ‘s power in the hands of Awami League.

Abu Rush, editor of the Secret Affidavit of Yahya Khan, is a journalist. He is the Editor of Bangladesh Defence Journal. His interest lies in investigative journalism, particularly in the fields of security and defence. He has dealt in this sector while working for various dailies in the past. It is his interest in this field that led him to publish this particular book and also to publish the Secret Affidavit of Yahya Khan in Bangladesh Defence Journal and in Amar Desh.

This 112-page book devotes 48 pages to the original text and 24 pages to some rare photographs. It also contains a life sketch of Yahya Khan as well as Rushd’s comments on the affidavit.
The book has been dedicated to Bir Shrestha Ruhul Amin who gave his life for the country in 1971.

The book is undoubtedly of interest to those interested in the history of the Liberation War. Abu Rushd says, "Gen. Yahya is nothing but a villain in our history but his accounts on 1971 surely are valuable and matters of reference in pursuing historical evidences. I hope this affidavit will make us know Yahya’s part of the quagmire imposed upon us forcibly and unjustly by the Pak military junta."

India Invaded Pakistan In 1971: Know The Facts, And The Enemy
 
Yahya wanted to hand over power to Mujib. Then after a meeting with bhutto, he decided not to do it. I wonder who is responsible for 1971?
 

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